Martin Luther King always made it clear his mission was more than just passive resistance to evil.
At the start of the Montgomery bus boycott, he told followers, “If we are arrested every day, if we are exploited every day, if we are trampled over every day, don’t ever let anyone pull you so low as to hate him. We must use the weapon of love.”
In the years that followed, with the emerging importance of television, Dr. King went beyond words and used the full power of body rhetoric, planning marches for the nightly news to elicit images of brutality against his people–guns, clubs, police dogs and high—pressure fire hoses–to win support for his cause.
“In the process of gaining our rightful place,” Dr. King said at the Lincoln Memorial, “we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds….we must rise to the majestic heights of meeting physical force with soul force.”
As we celebrate his birthday after a week of trauma and search for redemption, his beliefs echo in the words of an African-American president whose election would have been unthinkable without Martin Luther King’s life and his own brutal death.
Receiving his Nobel Peace Prize, Barack Obama said, “As someone who stands here as a direct consequence of Dr. King’s life work, I am living testimony to the moral force of non-violence. I know there’s nothing weak–nothing passive, nothing naïve–in the creed and lives of Gandhi and King.”
This week in Tucson, the President said, “”We cannot and will not be passive in the face of such violence…”
MORE.